I agree with you in principle, but not in terminology. I don't know why you think the estate in remainder as you like to call it, isn't fee simple. I have seen three deeds creating life estates. All three granted fee simple to the remainderman, while reserving a life estate for another party.
The "
Estate in Remainder or Reversion" as they are actually called, not as I like to call them, are not currently possessory for the holder of them. Therefore, until any Life Estate is extinguished, they are not a
"Fee Simple Estate" or any other variation of that also known as "
Fee," or "
Fee Simple Absolute." The only reason they are even an "
Estate" is due to the facts they are not fixed or certain regarding their duration and the interest will become possessory at some point in the future.
Your deeds were simply worded poorly. The "
grant" worded like that was for at the time of the end of the Life Estate. A Fee Simple Estate and a Life Estate cannot be simultaneously granted to different parties at the same time regarding the same land. Because the party not getting the Life Estate cannot take possession. So your deeds showed intent and bad legalese out of whoever drafted them.
It's part of a larger issue that crept in before with Pete's post about whether "leased fee" is actually a separate "estate" or just a slang label made up by appraisers for "fee simple as leased." The deeds that convey the real estate say "fee simple" (both for properties encumbered by leases and life estates) and one of the three defining criteria of fee simple is that it is perpetual. However, you can always find an appraiser who will argue that, as you say, "there is no fee simple." If it's perpetual, how can it disappear on appraiser fiat?
I can't help the fact my ahhhh, errrrr, "
Peers" should have gotten agency licenses so that they studied a few more things than just appraisal texts. If they had of bothered to do that they might have figured out that a lease
IS for a fixed or certain duration. Therefore, it is
not a Freehold Estate. It
is a Less-Than Freehold (Leasehold). This makes creating something in nominclature called "
fee simple as leased" a creating of something that just does not work under any hierarchy of estates ever created.
A deed that still mentions fee in relation to a lease computes because the lease is not Freehold. "
Fee" and "
Life Estate" only compute as far as showing intent.
Regarding other deed restrictions, people in the thread are headed off down a one way path having nothing to do with Life Estates. In some cases they are headed into nothing at all other than their own confusion. They are headed into estates lesser than Fee Simple Absolute by bringing up what are really called "
Defeasible Fee" or "
Fee Simple Qualified." Also known as "
Fee simple determinable" and "
fee simple subject to a condition subsequent."
Perpetuity: We cannot treat this word like we do in religion when referring to a deity. Because the argument breaks down upon escheat, and breaks down really badly at the end of society as we know it or the extinction of mankind. Or simply a reversion to the American indian way of life. After land reverts to the State (crown) it can't very well any longer be called a Freehold Estate as we can't very well expect the State to will it to anybody or there to ever be any "
inheritors" at that point, now can we? It is no longer owned by a person, or persons, it is owned by the public.
If we all want to get really stupid about this we can hold forth that there is no such thing as any Fee Simple Estate. Because the State (crown) always holds an Estate in Reversion for all perpetuity and all of us only have Life Estates for the life of our blood line or willed property. If we fail to propagate, or will our property, it goes back to the State (crown). .... Well, for as long as there
is a State that is! .. Let me see, next we have the Federal government and after that... hmmmm?
I guess the next time I get a SOW for the market value of a Fee Estate.... I'll have to appraise the underlying part owned by the State. Gosh, mortgage that client! Hmmm, can the State mortgage publically owned land? No wait, the State only has a Life Estate granted by the Federal government. The Federal government only has a Life Estate granted by........ would that be legitimacy or God?
Webbed.